Tag: LPRC2025

Posts count: 10

Beaver in water

LPRC 2025 species profile: North American beaver (Castor canadensis)

WWF-Canada’s 2025 Living Planet Report Canada (LPRC) shows the steepest average population decline of Canadian species yet — and one of the reasons is nature’s interconnectedness. Each species is part of a larger web, and when... Read More
WWF-Canada’s 2025 Living Planet Report Canada (LPRC) shows the steepest average population decline of Canadian species yet — and one of...
Read More
Abel Aqqaq, Lead Guardian for the Taloyoak Umaruliririgut Association.

LPRC 2025: ‘Wildlife is very important for us up here, it’s our only garden,’ Abel Aqqaq, Taloyoak Umaruliririgut Association

The health of wildlife can't be tracked by a single indicator or knowledge system alone. The Living Planet Report Canada also shares the perspectives of Indigenous people across Canada, like Abel Aqqaq, Lead Guardian... Read More
The health of wildlife can't be tracked by a single indicator or knowledge system alone. The Living Planet Report...
Read More
Ross Hinks, a Miawpukek Band member.

LPRC 2025: ‘Our new generation will probably never know what a wild salmon looks like,’ Ross Hinks, Miawpukek First Nation

Tracking the health of wildlife can't be fully captured by a single indicator or knowledge system alone. WWF's Living Planet Report Canada 2025 also shares the perspectives of Indigenous people across the country, like... Read More
Tracking the health of wildlife can't be fully captured by a single indicator or knowledge system alone. WWF's Living...
Read More
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